gordo
Well-known member
I don't know. Is a Glass Blower in the manufacturing industry, or the service industry? Is a Clay Potter in the manufacturing industry, or the service industry? These are both crafts where you are actually making something, as is Printing.
I can see how a Pre Press operator or department would see themselves as being in the service industry, but I don't think the same can be said for a Press Operator. I would think that he would consider himself a skilled manufacturer, and some may call themselves Craftsmen as well.
This can get pretty fuzzy, but I think that in the context that Erik was describing, printing falls very short of being a manufacturing process since printing does not have unambiguous specifications, tolerances, and objective criteria for accepting or rejecting the results of the process. It's all very arbitrary, subjective, and relative.
On the other hand, if you are manufacturing a car - all the components that go into that process are clearly and objectively defined. If parts fail to meet specifications they can be rejected. That is not true of printing. There is no craft in supplying materials to a manufacturer. Either the materials meet specification within defined tolerances or they don't.